626 lines
28 KiB
TeX
626 lines
28 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-25-sanitize}{%
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\chapter{Sanitize}\label{chapter-25-sanitize}}
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\epigraph{``Though it is not poor advice that one should imitate excellence,
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one who follows this advice alone can only ever aspire to be an
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imitation of excellence.''}{Extract from the treatise ``On Rule'', author unknown (widely
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believed to be Prince Bastien of Arans)}
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As the radiance in his armour slowly faded, the Mirror Knight turned
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towards us.
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With the echoes of Light that'd shone within his plate dispersing, the
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aura of power that'd hung around him should have gone the same way --
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and it did, some. Christophe of Pavanie no longer seemed like an
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implacable thing fashioned out silver and light: he looked human again,
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the raised visor of his barbute revealing dark locks pressed by sweat
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against his brow. Yet I could see the certainty he was moving with now,
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that certain something that came from being in your element and knowing
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it, and grew no less wary of the man. The softly whistling sword in his
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hand he sheathed without a word, sliding it home in a beautiful and
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heavy piece of iron, but even his putting away the Saint of Sword's
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cutting rectitude made blade was not enough to have my shoulders loosen.
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Losing the unearthly touch had simply left behind a man, I thought, with
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dark green eyes and narrow lips. Flawed, yes, but not unpleasantly so.
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It made him seem more attainable, the stark opposite of the Exiled
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Prince's golden perfection back in the day -- which had been beautiful
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but also somehow unnatural to the eye. This one, though, he looked
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cloaked in might but no less \emph{human} for it. It was a dangerous
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thing, that mix of vulnerability and power. I should know, given how
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often I'd used it to bind people to me. Soldiers were willing to pay
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dues to a faraway idol, but real loyalty came from sharing in blood and
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mud. Christophe de Pavanie, to speak the words that had my fingers
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clenching in dismay, looked like someone people might rally around.
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That was dangerous, when the man being rallied to bore both a sword
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forged for deicide and a child's understanding of politics.
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The Mirror Knight had carved his way through seven demons and half a
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Court's worth of fae in a single evening, so there was no arguing that
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the man had the might to back anything he chose to say. Much as my mind
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wanted to argue that providence and another lesser hand had provided in
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this, that the Severance and Light made him uniquely suited to
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demonslaying, I knew those whispers for what they were -- a tinge of
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fear and dismay. Behind them was the knowledge that, right now, the one
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trick I had that might still be able to curb him was beyond my reach:
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now that the emergency wards had come on, I could no longer try to gate
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the hero to his demise. \emph{The Saint could cut gates}, I thought.
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\emph{So would it even be enough if I could still use them?}
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``Black Queen,'' Christophe de Pavanie greeted me. ``One of them slipped
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by ua, a dreadfiend. Did your party catch it?''
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Only then did his eyes slide away from me and onto the rest of our
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company, ignoring the legionaries and barely paying attention to the
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mages before lingering on Masego and at last offering the Blade of Mercy
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a slight nod. Even that was enough to have the younger man blooming in
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pleasure, whatever gilding having been knocked off the Mirror Knight
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today freshly plastered back on by this victory.
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``It's been destroyed,'' I replied, voice even. ``There were losses.''
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His face fell into dismay, the peace on it whisked away in a heartbeat.
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``Lady Eliade?'' he hoarsely asked.
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``And sixteen of my soldiers,'' I replied, tone growing sharp.
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I grieved Nephele's death, but power and a story had not somehow made
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her life worth more than those others.
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``I did not mean to dismiss their deaths,'' he stiffly said.
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I forced myself to breathe out. It'd been an unkind interpretation of
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his words, and I'd known it even as I spoke the words.
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``My temper is not at its best,'' I replied, stopping short of an
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apology.
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The Vagrant Spear, who I'd barely been paying attention to, began to
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pant noticeably as she suddenly went deathly pale. Earlier upright and
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dealing in Light, she now began to lean heavily against her spear -- and
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even then she looked about to topple over.
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``Sidonia,'' the Mirror Knight exclaimed, catching her elbow.
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I stepped forward, though he had things seemingly in hand so I did not
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try to offer my own arm.
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``Hierophant can provide healing, if you're willing,'' I offered as I
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kept limping forward.
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Now that I was paying closer attention to her, the ironically
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eye-catching scorched eye was not the worst of what she'd gone through
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tonight. There were subtle tells of harsher wounds. For one the flush
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she'd had while fighting had not abated in the slightest since, and she
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was sweating badly enough it was making her face paint run. Some tells
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were less subtle, like blade marks including one puncture that would
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have gone through her lung by the angle. Nasty stuff, lung wounds, even
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for Named. Some slender blade had done it, but definitely a sword. The
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marks weren't bleeding, though, and even looked to be healed some: scabs
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had formed, though they looked bloody and crusty. The Concocter's work,
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no doubt.
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``The second of the peddler's potions has run out,'' the Vagrant Spear
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admitted. ``It was champion's brew, Black Queen, or close enough. There
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is little that the Hierophant can do. With a few days of rest, I should
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be on my feet again.''
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``Something can be done about the fever at least, surely,'' the Mirror
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Knight insisted.
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``He's right,'' I said. ``Consider it an order by an officer of the
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Truce and Terms. I might still have questions for you, so you can't
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disappear into sleep and avoid all the unpleasant work that'll come
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after this spectacular mess.''
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She let out a weak chuckle.
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``As relentless a taskmistress as your reputation promised,'' the
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Vagrant Spear told me, though it almost sounded like a compliment.
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Masego had come to stand by me, having already wrested away sorcery from
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a mage, and by the look on his face I suspected he would have healed
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Sidonia regardless of her answer. Zeze was not a foe to other people's
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pride, usually, but he did tend to draw the line at what he perceived to
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be willful stupidity.
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``Close your eyes,'' Hierophant ordered, yellow light coming to wreathe
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his fingers. ``And if you feel muscles spasming, tell me immediately.''
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I heard him mutter \emph{champion's brew} with a pronounced degree of
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distaste under his breath, then add something about calling poison what
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it was. I clenched my fingers and unclenched them, considering how I was
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now to deal with the Mirror Knight. From the corner of my eye I could
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see that the Blade of Mercy was hesitating to approach, likely afraid of
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interrupting a conversation between two people that were his social
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superiors, and in a snap decision I gestured for him to approach. It'd
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buy me a bit of time to think while they chatted, and I took the
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opportunity to send some regulars doubling back to get mages and priests
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here in all haste. I wanted every inch of this bloody place scoured
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clean until even layers of bedrock had gone.
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Hells, if we could figure out a way how I was going to dump this entire
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section of the Arsenal out of here and then find a way to ensure not
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even a sliver of any kind of taint was able to crawl out of the
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destruction visited onto it.
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I still had one loose end to clean up before I could pass supervision of
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this to competent officers and crash into a bed, though, and now I had
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to decide whether I wanted to take the Mirror Knight along with me when
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I saw to it. The man had no position under the Terms that'd warrant
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that, of course, and by treating him like he did I might be lending him
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that authority in fact. If \emph{I} acted like he was important, a lot
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of people would follow suit. That was the argument against it. The
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opposite side of this was that the Terms were an abstract, an ideal: in
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practice, power mattered. The Mirror Knight had the Severance, he was
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nigh-unkillable and was also a rather famous Proceran hero -- arguably
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the most famous of them all. The Kingfisher Prince had spent most the
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war up in Twilight's Pass, after all.
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It was indisputable that Christophe de Pavanie would end up with clout,
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after tonight, so shouldn't I begin to bring him into the\ldots{} fold,
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for lack of a better term, as soon as possible? Even if it happened that
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he was intent on being an enemy, it'd be best to find out early. It felt
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like a mistake, but then it'd be just as much of one to go the other way
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wouldn't it? The Intercessor knew her way around a scheme: her works
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left me only shades of loss to pick from. From the corner of my eye I
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noticed the conversation between the two Proceran heroes had come to an
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end, which meant my delaying must come to an end.
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``Mirror Knight,'' I called out.
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I gestured for him to follow me when he glanced my way, stepping away
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from the closest soldiers for a degree of privacy. I hid a wince when he
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came close, as the last glints of Light in his armour unsettled the
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Night within my body -- like wind on the surface of a pond. I could
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understand now why Firstborn would find him deeply unsettling, being so
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much more deeply dyed in the Night than I could ever hope to be. But it
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was the sword that had me wariest of all. Even sheathed, I could feel
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its hostility. \emph{You know who I am}, I thought, sneaking a look at
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it. \emph{And there's just enough of Laurence left in you to hold a
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grudge, isn't there?}
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``Black Queen,'' Christophe de Pavanie said. ``You wanted to talk?''
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His eyes were wary, but he did not strike me as spoiling for a fight. I
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supposed even his stamina must run out eventually, or at least dip
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downwards.
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``This isn't over yet,'' I said.
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He slowly nodded.
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``Antoine says you have fingered the culprit behind all this,'' he said.
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``The Wandering Bard, yes? More fearsome an enemy than her Name would
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have one believe.''
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``The Bard can't act directly,'' I bluntly said. ``Think of her as a
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devil or a fae: her weapons are deals and persuasion, not blades. And
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she had helpers in the Arsenal from the start.''
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The Mirror Knight's face went cold.
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``Traitors,'' he spat. ``That will need seeing to.''
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``Most are dead, outed by their actions during the crisis,'' I said.
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``But there is one still unaccounted for -- the person who unleashed the
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Concocter's creations in the Miscellaneous Stacks, likely the same
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collaborator who tried to arrange for the Kingfisher Prince to fight
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guards.''
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``Then we are still in danger,'' the Mirror Knight said, side of the
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neck twitching as he forced himself not to look to the side.
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Where Masego was seeing to wounded Vagrant Spear. Wasn't the danger to
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himself that was worrying him, evidently. I was going to have to look
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into that relationship, wasn't I? Gossip about Named tended to be a lot
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more useful than you'd think in figuring them out, at least when it was
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halfway credible.
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``I don't believe the individual in question to be a current threat,'' I
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noted. ``But neither do I believe in letting loose ends linger.''
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Dark green eyes narrowed.
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``You've been vague on purpose about the traitor,'' the Mirror Knight
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said. ``Are you afraid I'll take justice in my own hands?''
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That edged on a challenge, and it had my blood quickening. My instinct
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was to slap him down, to set a tone for the coming days that established
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very clearly where we stood in the pecking order, but that was a
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\emph{risk}. I'd be antagonizing a useful resource and, to be blunt, if
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the challenge turned to a fight the consequences of a defeat here would
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be disastrous. I must walk a fine line, remaining convivial without
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bending my neck -- weakness would invite pursuit, not restraint.
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``You barely know the third of what went on in the Arsenal this night,''
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I flatly replied. ``Justice is not something you're even remotely in a
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position to provide.''
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His lip curled in displeasure, but there was nothing there he could
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argue with.
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``You could, however,'' I continued in a calm voice, ``assist me in my
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duties under the Terms as witness for your side. Something I brought you
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aside to invite you to do.''
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``If there is still a traitor, this fight has not ended,'' Christophe of
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Pavanie insisted.
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``This is not a battle, it is a disciplinary matter,'' I said. ``If
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there are sentences to be doled out, then that will be done by the high
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officers of the Truce and Terms -- and after discussion and trial, not
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by dragging people to the nearest hanging tree.''
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\emph{Too confrontational}, I chided myself, but then what choice did I
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have? I could not let him believe, not even for a moment, that he had
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the right or authority to pass judgement over other Named. That'd be the
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end of the Truce and Terms, an implicit admission that its rules would
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always favour the side with the biggest stick. Without the perception of
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fairness, they were nothing but ink and air.
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``I do not speak of summary executions, Black Queen,'' the Mirror Knight
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said, sounding appalled.
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``Then we have no issue,'' I said. ``Will you be accompanying me, or
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will I be reaching out to another Chosen?''
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That particular trick I'd learned Akua. The false dilemma was an older
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lesson, but the little deceit of refraining from specifying something --
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which hero I would be reaching out to, in this case -- while letting the
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wording do the thinking for the interlocutor. Chosen, I'd said, and
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there was only one other Proceran hero. The Mirror Knight's eyes flicked
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to the Blade of Mercy. Young, exhausted, more than a little shaken by
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his brush with a demon. And the older man would see the younger as in
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his charge, too, not exactly a subordinate but at least a
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responsibility. The question had decided its own answer.
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``I accept your invitation to ser- \emph{stand} as witness,'' the Mirror
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Knight said, hastily changing the sentence halfway through.
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``Good,'' I said. ``See to your affairs here, then prepare yourself to
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leave. We'll be going as soon as enough mages and priests have arrived
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to contain this properly.''
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The man nodded and briskly walked away. Fair enough. I checked in on
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Masego, to see how the healing was doing, but was shooed away. I did
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manage to slide in that I wanted him to lead containment and purge
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protocols here, which he agreed to without missing a beat. Our
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reinforcements were there before long, first a few careful squads of
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lightly armoured Dominion warriors sneaking in to have a look and then
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proper companies. Mages and priests aplenty, led by the Harrowed Witch
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and an earnest-faced man in armour who introduced himself as the Forlorn
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Paladin. Right, the hero with amnesia -- one of Indrani's band. Much as
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their presence was appreciated, it was an old Lycaonese captain I left
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in charge, with a note that he should follow the recommendation of the
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specialists regarding containment to the letter.
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With that left in good hands and the Mirror Knight having made his
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goodbyes to the Vagrant Spear and the Blade of Mercy, the two of us
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left. No escort came with us, though Lieutenant Inger offered, as I did
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not want to spook our target too soon. The downside of that was that I
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was left alone with Christophe de Pavanie, who for some godforsaken
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reason took it upon himself to attempt stilted small talk.
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``I heard that you dealt handily with the undead plague in southern
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Hainaut,'' the Mirror Knight said.
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I eyed him sideways, and seriously debated simply telling him he didn't
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have to do this. Good odds he'd taken as an insult, though, so I
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supposed we were fated to suffer through this.
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``Would that we could have prevented that instead of suppressed it,'' I
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said, then made effort of my own. ``I heard through the White Knight
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that you were part of the band that sunk a turtle-ship near Cleves -- a
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well-done thing.''
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I bit my tongue a heartbeat later when I recalled what Hanno had told me
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of \emph{how} that'd been achieved: throwing the man to my side through
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the shell, like some sort of eldritch trebuchet stone. His cheeks
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reddened and his hand slipped towards the Severance. Not to grasp its
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handle or threaten to unsheathe it, I thought, but\ldots{} cautiously.
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Disbelievingly. As if to reassure himself it was there. Fuck, that might
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actually be worse. There were ways to handle a swaggering bully with a
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new toy, but this looked like a deeper thing.
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``It was necessary work,'' the Mirror Knight said, tone steady.
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``Perhaps we might discuss where we are headed, and to meet whom?''
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Yeah, I wasn't going to look that particular gift horse in the mouth.
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``This is one of the paths to the Workshop,'' I said. ``And we're headed
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towards the persona quarters of the Hunted Magician.''
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The dark-haired man jolted in surprise.
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``One of the Damned?'' he said. ``I had thought\ldots{}''
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Wait, this entire time had he thought that I was trying to off one of
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the heroes and using him as a witness and helper? Had that been why he
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was so appalled when I mentioned hanging? Neither of those questions
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were something I could really ask outright, so I swallowed them and
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pressed on.
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``My proof of his dealings with the Wandering Bard is weak,'' I said,
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``but I have enough that I should be able to startle more out of him.
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Besides, his troubles with Autumn came back to haunt all of us.''
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``He has given an oath to the Fair Folk?'' the Mirror Knight asked.
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``He never paid the debt,'' I corrected. ``And Autumn came here in part
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to collect.''
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``Then every life taken by the fae is on his head,'' Christophe de
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Pavanie coldly said.
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I shook my head.
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``He didn't invite them, and as far as I know his enmity with them is
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older than his signing onto the Truce and Terms,'' I said. ``Quite a few
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Named have old enemies that'd take a swing at them if they could, that's
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not a crime.''
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``Corpses strewn across the Arsenal speak otherwise,'' the Mirror Knight
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said.
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``He was a tool in that, not the culprit,'' I flatly said.
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That, to my surprise, actually seemed to strike a chord.
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``But he is a traitor still,'' the Proceran hero said.
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``\emph{That},'' I muttered, ``I won't argue with.''
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And I suspected I already knew exactly what the Intercessor had bought
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his cooperation with, which while understandable did not make me want to
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burn him at the stake any less. When we actually got to the Workshop I
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had to ask for directions, since I didn't know where his quarters were,
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but the Arsenal was crawling with soldiers now so it was easily done. I
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shot a look at the Mirror Knight when we got to the door, waiting for
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his nod, and only then knocked. Before it opened I already knew he'd be
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behind it: the buzz of sorcery against my fingers, the telltale mark of
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something being warded up to its neck, assured me as much. He'd clearly
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made his rooms into a place where it would exceedingly difficult for
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enemies to find him.
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The door was cracked open, the Hunted Magician carefully peering
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through. His eyes widened when he saw me, but he mastered his surprise
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and opened the door wide. Only then did he notice Christophe de Pavanie
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looming tall at my side, and the mask of affability he'd halfway put on
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lapsed into blankness. Whatever he'd believed me to be here for, the
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Mirror Knight being along did not fit with that belief. I used my staff
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to gently but firmly finish pushing open the door.
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``Hunted Magician,'' I mildly said. ``You know the Mirror Knight, I take
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it?''
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``I know of him, Your Majesty,'' the Proceran mage said, inclining his
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head in a silent greeting. ``What bring me the pleasure of your
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companies, if I might ask?''
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``Not the sort of conversation to have in a hallway, yes?'' I smiled.
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``It would only be decent to offer seating and refreshments,'' the
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Mirror Knight pointedly said.
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The look of pure genuine dislike they traded after that allowed me to
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take a look inside while they were both busy. Classic Alamans tastes,
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all cushions and painted wood with the furniture alone being worth as
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much as some houses back in Laure. We didn't pay the man nearly enough
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for that, but there was no telling what wealth he'd squirrelled away or
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favours he'd called in since.
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``Alas, I only have one set of cups fit to witness royal lips,'' the
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Hunted Magician said. ``I'm afraid you will have to some servant set I
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have lying around, Knight.''
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``Your hospitality matches your reputation,'' the Mirror Knight replied
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without missing a beat.
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Point went to Christophe for that round, I decided.
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``Oh, we won't be here for long,'' I said, still smiling. ``I only mean
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to put some misunderstandings to rest, then we'll be off.''
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The Proceran villain glanced at the hero, brow quirking.
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``I can just imagine,'' he thinly smiled, ``what manner of
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misunderstanding you mean.''
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The Mirror Knight shot me a burning look, but if he hadn't wanted me to
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use his being an ass to my purposes then he shouldn't have been in the
|
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first place. We were invited to sit, myself on a seat like the Hunted
|
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Magician himself while Christophe was made to stay on a padded red
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footstool by my side.
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|
|
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``You are aware of the troubles that struck the Arsenal, of course?'' I
|
|
asked.
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|
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``Indeed,'' the Hunted Magician said. ``I fought in defence of the
|
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Workshop, but found myself alone and so withdrew in the face of the
|
|
enemy. I did return to help with healing at the Sinister Physician's
|
|
infirmary when the immediate peril had passed, though I returned when I
|
|
grew tired and my services superfluous.''
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|
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He probably \emph{had} done all those things, I mused. He seemed like
|
|
the thorough type in some ways, so there'd likely be witnesses and
|
|
everything. Unfortunately for him, I wasn't \emph{digging} at the truth
|
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-- I already had it. What I wanted from him was an admission.
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``I did not see you at the Workshop when I fought there,'' the Mirror
|
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Knight accusingly said.
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``There's more than one room in it, as it happens,'' the Hunted Magician
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drily replied.
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|
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|
``You're familiar with fae,'' I said. ``What's your take on their
|
|
presence here?''
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|
|
``I see,'' he mused. ``As you've grown to suspect, Your Majesty, our foe
|
|
must have used my past dealings with their kind to muster them against
|
|
the Arsenal -- though I was not hunted for long, and so their true
|
|
reason to have come here must be a deeper game.''
|
|
|
|
Halfway believable, I thought, but still a little weak. He had to know
|
|
that, so odds were he was counting on mere suspicion not being enough
|
|
considering how useful he was to the Grand Alliance as an artificer and
|
|
enchanter. In most circumstances that would have been a correct read of
|
|
the situation, to his credit. These were not circumstances, and it was
|
|
not just anyone he'd bargained with.
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|
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|
``That was also my conclusion,'' I mildly said. ``And who would you name
|
|
our foe?''
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|
``It must be the Dead King,'' the Hunted Magician gravely assured me.
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|
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|
I drummed my fingers against the side of my staff, thoughtfully.
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|
|
|
``Let's try this again,'' I said. ``But with you being aware that I slit
|
|
the Wandering Bard's throat after extracting every secret I could from
|
|
her, including her multiple collaborators within these walls.''
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|
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|
The man paled, grey-blue eyes dilating with fear.
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|
|
|
``I understand that questions must be asked, Your Majesty, but I have
|
|
never dealt with a foe of the Grand Alliance,'' he assured me, voice
|
|
impressively calm.
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|
|
|
``Liar,'' the Mirror Knight coldly said. ``You stink of it.''
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|
|
|
``Do be silent, \emph{péquenaud,''} the Hunted Magician snarled. ``I
|
|
must protest at the presence of one of the hounds of the Heavens, Your
|
|
Majesty, this is most-''
|
|
|
|
I sighed and slowly I reached for the long dragonbone pipe within my
|
|
cloak. The eyes of the two of them on me as I slowly opened a packet of
|
|
wakeleaf -- Hanno's gift, amusingly -- and stuffed it before passing my
|
|
palm over the bowl and letting a flare of back flame light it. I
|
|
breathed in deep, then leaned back into my seat and crossed one of my
|
|
legs over the other. I breathed out the smoke slowly, letting it curl up
|
|
around my face.
|
|
|
|
``Your Majesty,'' the Hunted Magician tried again. ``If I may-''
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|
|
|
``Who am I, Magician?'' I patiently asked him.
|
|
|
|
``The Black Queen, as all know,'' the man replied. ``I question not your
|
|
authority under the Truce and Terms-''
|
|
|
|
``No,'' I said. ``You just take me for a fool. Now that with the Bard's
|
|
help you were able to have the prince holding your debt killed, you
|
|
think you can wiggle your way out of this without too much trouble.''
|
|
|
|
``I have never heard of this woman you accuse me of having made common
|
|
cause with,'' the Hunted Magician said, exasperated.
|
|
|
|
``It must have seemed like a sweet bargain,'' I mused. ``Open a few
|
|
canisters of gas, weave an illusion or two, and just like that the great
|
|
sword ever hanging over your head would go away forever. Hardly even a
|
|
breach of the Terms, even if you got caught. There are others under this
|
|
roof who have done the same or worse.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed in the smoke. The Mirror Knight was watching me in silence,
|
|
visibly eager to speak but forcing himself to remain silent anyway.
|
|
|
|
``I brought worthy concerns to you, Your Majesty,'' the man said. ``Why
|
|
would I do such a thing, were I a traitor?''
|
|
|
|
I breathed out the smoke, then leaned forward.
|
|
|
|
``Right now,'' I said, ``the only thing standing between you and a
|
|
tribunal of heroes, of angry Grand Alliance officers? It's my word,
|
|
Magician. So I want you to take a moment to consider, \emph{really}
|
|
\emph{consider}, exactly how much of an imposition on my patience you
|
|
want to be after the night I've had.''
|
|
|
|
The Hunted Magician fell silent.
|
|
|
|
``This was a bad bargain,'' I told him, tone cool and calculating. ``I
|
|
don't even need to lift a finger to destroy you, after this: all I need
|
|
to do is stop extending my protection and they'll have you gagged and
|
|
chained before the hour's out. And even if you escape, where do you go?
|
|
We're half the continent, Magician, you'll be hunted like a criminal
|
|
everywhere we rule. Even in the League we're owed favours, and if you
|
|
somehow make it to Praes the best you can hope for is a gilded cage --
|
|
though more likely they'll use you, then murder you so you cannot be
|
|
used by another. You traded one faraway fairy prince as an enemy for the
|
|
lasting anger of \emph{half fucking Calernia}.''
|
|
|
|
``This is coercion,'' the Hunted Magician tightly said. ``Is that not an
|
|
abuse of your authority, Black Queen?''
|
|
|
|
I spewed out a long stream of smoke.
|
|
|
|
``Authority,'' I repeated, amused. ``Are you going to begin listening to
|
|
me, then? The word goes both ways. You cannot hide under my wing and
|
|
sink a knife in my flank at the same time -- I am not so tolerant a soul
|
|
as to allow \emph{that}.''
|
|
|
|
His appeal to my better nature -- which had always been pragmatic enough
|
|
to know when it was time to go for a walk and let the other one handle
|
|
things -- having failed, he turned to the other way out of this mess.
|
|
|
|
``What do you want?'' the dark-haired mage asked, teeth gritted.
|
|
|
|
``I want a reason I should go through the effort to keep your head off a
|
|
pike,'' I said. ``Because the more you keep wasting my time, Hunted
|
|
Magician, the more I begin to consider how putting it there instead
|
|
would solve \emph{so very many} of my problems.''
|
|
|
|
The enthusiasm I'd spoken that last sentence with, I thought, was what
|
|
tipped him over the edge.
|
|
|
|
``I know you can extract memories with Night,'' he suddenly said. ``So I
|
|
can give you the Bard.''
|
|
|
|
``I have the Bard already,'' I said, unimpressed. ``Try harder.''
|
|
|
|
``I know how the Blessed Artificer and the Repentant Magister were
|
|
tipped off to the existence of Quartered Seasons, and by whom,'' the
|
|
Hunted Magician said.
|
|
|
|
My pulse slowed. I wanted that. Most the traitors of this night had come
|
|
from outside the Arsenal, and that meant the Intercessor was likely to
|
|
still have helpers out there. A way to begin ripping out her influence
|
|
root and stem was a decent prize to bargain with. Not, though, quite
|
|
enough to tempt me.
|
|
|
|
``Better,'' I said. ``But sweeten the pot a little more.''
|
|
|
|
First he looked insulted by the cavalier treatment, then hesitant. He
|
|
licked his lips.
|
|
|
|
``I know,'' the Hunted Magician slowly said, ``where to find the ruling
|
|
crown of Autumn.''
|
|
|
|
I breathed in smoke so that a triumphant grin would not reveal the truth
|
|
of my thoughts. And like that, the pieces fell together. If Hierophant
|
|
could get his hands on it, Quartered Seasons became more than an idle
|
|
notion.
|
|
|
|
``That will do,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
The Hunted Magician's relief was not as well-hidden as he probably
|
|
believed it to be. I rose to my feet, brushing some ash off my cloak.
|
|
|
|
``Don't try to leave the Arsenal,'' I said, not bothering to add on a
|
|
threat. ``I'll send for you when the situation calms, likely with the
|
|
White Knight and other Alliance representatives sitting in.''
|
|
|
|
``As you say,'' the Hunted Magician said through gritted teeth.
|
|
|
|
I glanced at the Mirror Knight and saw the face of a man who was moments
|
|
away from blurting out a great many opinions.
|
|
|
|
``Escort me back to my rooms, please,'' I said.
|
|
|
|
Christophe de Pavanie stiffly nodded, and even opened the door for me.
|
|
|
|
I suspected the conversation that was about to follow, though, would be
|
|
a great deal less civil.
|